Ordering Tests - A Strategic Approach
- Pre-test Probability: Start with clinical assessment. High suspicion warrants different tests than low suspicion.
- Test Characteristics:
- Screening: High sensitivity (Sn) to rule out (SNOUT).
- Confirmatory: High specificity (Sp) to rule in (SPIN).
- Avoid Cascades: Order tests sequentially, not all at once. Re-evaluate after each result.

⭐ Likelihood Ratios (LRs): A key tool for evidence-based testing.
- LR+ > 10 and LR- < 0.1 provide strong evidence to rule in or rule out a disease, respectively.
Incidentalomas - The Unexpected Discovery

An unexpected finding on imaging ordered for an unrelated reason. The core challenge is balancing the risk of malignancy against the risks and costs of over-investigation.
- General Approach: Assess for symptoms, high-risk features (e.g., patient history of malignancy), and compare with prior imaging if available.
- Key Factors: Focus on lesion size, morphology (shape, density, enhancement), and stability over time.
- Common Thresholds:
- Adrenal: >1 cm needs biochemical workup. Consider surgery if >4 cm or functional.
- Thyroid: >1 cm may require FNA based on sonographic features.
- Renal: Use Bosniak classification for cysts. III/IV warrant urology referral.
⭐ Most adrenal incidentalomas are non-functioning benign adenomas. The primary goal is to exclude pheochromocytoma, Cushing's syndrome, and malignancy. A biopsy is contraindicated until pheochromocytoma is ruled out.
Management Pathways - Charting The Course
- Initial step: Characterize the finding based on size, morphology, density, and enhancement patterns.
- Assess patient context: Consider age, comorbidities, life expectancy, and personal history of malignancy.
- Utilize established guidelines (e.g., Fleischner for pulmonary nodules, Bosniak for renal cysts, ACR TI-RADS for thyroid nodules).
- 💡 Principle of primum non nocere: Balance the risk of invasive workup (anxiety, cost, complications) against the risk of missing a significant pathology.
- Involve the patient in shared decision-making, especially for surveillance plans.
⭐ For adrenal incidentalomas, a key threshold is size. Lesions >4 cm or those with suspicious imaging features (e.g., high attenuation on non-contrast CT >10 HU, low washout) warrant further workup for malignancy or hormonal activity.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- The primary principle for incidental findings is "first, do no harm."
- Always correlate clinically; an incidentaloma in an asymptomatic patient is often benign.
- Adhere to standardized guidelines like Fleischner criteria (for lung nodules) or Bosniak classification (for renal cysts).
- Informed consent and shared decision-making are crucial before further investigation.
- Active surveillance is frequently preferred over immediate intervention for low-risk findings.
- Decision-making must consider patient age, life expectancy, and comorbidities.
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